It is also significant that unlike a lot of developed economies, we are still a young and also a growing population so water needs are expected to grow exponentially in the coming years.
It is an irony that Pakistan either has floods or droughts. In such a situation it is of primary importance that in all other spheres of life, policies based on water conservation as well as strategies where the water table can be maintained at optimum levels should be the focus of the government.
I know what I am going to say next will probably make most people cringe. We need to build the Kalabagh Dam. We need to build lots of dams, but we also need to build the Kalabagh Dam and our political leadership needs to show some maturity, and get it done.
We have no choice
So what are the issues with the Kalabagh Dam that make it such a pariah that even the mere mention of the name rasies political and nationalist hackles? It is probably not the fact that the dam is capable of irrigating six to seven million acres of land. It surely can’t be the fact that the dam can irrigate about 800,000 acres of land that is at a higher altitude than the river Indus. And the fact that the dam will also help produce about 3,800 megawatts of cheap hydropower has got to be a huge selling point. But apparently it is not enough.
For a country that is agrarian in nature – an industry that is the most water-intensive of them all – it does not seem to be important enough. For a country that is looking at a looming food security issue, it does not seem important enough.For a country that suffers from severe floods and droughts, it does not seem to be important. For a country that is facing the worst ever power crisis, it does not seem to be important enough. But it should be. The consequences of believing otherwise can be catastrophic.
Bashir A Malik, former chief technical adviser of the United Nations and World Bank, has said and this has been reported in the press that, “Sindh and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa will become drought areas in the years to come, if the Kalabagh Dam is not built.” At the same time former K-P chief minister Shamsul Mulk has said that the “Kalabagh Dam will help in erasing poverty from Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, as it will irrigate 800,000 acres of cultivable land that is located 100-150 feet above the level of River Indus.” And Diamer-Bhasha Dam is not a substitute for Kalabagh Dam because of its limited irrigation capabilities, because of the terrain.
I won’t even go into the flood control options that the dam will offer with its ability to store almost seven million acre feet of water.
One of the arguments that India has often used is that Pakistan does not use the water it has, either for hydropower or for irrigation, and therefore India should not be stopped from doing so. This has helped it win World Bank funding for many projects, even though they are being built on disputed territory.
The opposition
Sindh and K-P are the major opponents of the dam, and they both have a number of concerns. Some of these concerns are frivolous and political in nature. Others are not. Some concerns that Sindh has are that it will see a decreased flow in the river Indus and that it will see a reduced water pressure from upstream that it needs on its coast to avoid an incursion by the sea. Sindh also fears that the once powerful river Indus, already a shadow of its former greatness will become no more than stream with yet another mega dam. These are concerns that can, and should be addressed. But Sindh’s concern that its share of the Indus water will be curtailed as water from the Kalabagh will go to irrigate farmlands in Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, at their cost is simple political propaganda. This can be discussed and a mutually agreeable water-sharing formula can be evolved, if the political will exists.
K-P fears that like the Ghazi-Barotha project which is located in K-P, but the power generation turbines were build in Punjab, Kalabagh Dam may see a similar scenario. This has given Punjab the right to royalties from power generated from Ghazi Barotha even though it has said it will claim no royalties. But what is more significant for K-P is that it has denied it the option of claiming those royalties. This can be worked out so that it does not happen again.
Political will
There are issues, some real, some concocted, but the government, at the federal and provincial level can find a work-around in the national interest, and all parties involved should keep that in mind, the greater national interest.
Primamry requirement of food requires copious amounts of water. More than two thirds of all fresh water abstraction worldwide ( and up to 90% in some countries) goes towards food production. This is also something we need to think about in the years to come.
We need to put all our energies behind speeding up the pace of work on this and also the Diamer Bhasha Dam. We need to resolve our issues with India and move faster with the Neelum-Jhelum Dam. And all relevant bodies that are related to the development and regulation of water resources in the country like the Water and Power Development Authority and the Indus River System Authority (Irsa) and others need to do their jobs. And our political leaders need to let them!
(Read: The Kalabagh Dam resurrected)
Published in The Express Tribune, December 3rd, 2012.
COMMENTS (11)
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I wish there can be some social media outrage and blast for not going ahead with the project. Social media...recently its been making wonders!!
Writer has wrong assumption about funding to India for dams in J&K calling it a disputed territory? The dispute is only about vacation of AJK & GB (illegally and illogically held) by GOP. If the assertion is correct than what is hitch for International lenders in funding such projects in AJK & GB (including Diamer Bhasha Dam) and why no royalty to AJK for Mangla Dam? Please do not drag India (including J&K) into such lack of political consensus and controversies in Pakistan.
kalabagh dam is an environment disaster, will destroy the river, downstream ecosystem. This project is also detrimental to Sindh province, whose water will now be controlled by the upper riparian punjabis. Before any deicision, a detailed analysis and discussion should have taken place. The way I see it, it will destroy the environment as well and risk for Sindhis.
I am amazed at how simplistically the author has approached this complex issue.First of all the national interest needs to be defined since until now mostly the national interest was actually interest of Punjab. I am really surprised at the author's naivety that makes him state things like "This can be worked out so that it does not happen again." The author is oblivious to the fact that all over the world, big dams are now being discouraged because of huge ecological impacts. Besides that, we can make numerous small dams on which the government is already working. There is no need to bring up Kala Bagh dam to further fracture the already weakening national harmony. Avoiding another Baluchistan like problem over an already bad project should be the best way ahead.
The lower part of Indus River has been taken over by the sea and has hurt the lives of people living there for generations. Each dam has cut down the amount of water coming downstream. Now if more water is retained at the top then it would hurt the river and many lives forever. It is not a reversible process and once the lives are destroyed there is no guarantee how much hatred would it create. In many countries like Pakistan and India where most of the rains come only during a couple of months the rain and flood water should be stored in several small dams instead of one large dam. In India several businesses recycle the rain water and we can do that ourselves without much expenses and hatred. Any and all new dams must only be filled during the rainy/flood season to avoid complications. One such example is a dam on Hub River in Baluchistan near Karachi.
Kalabagh, Diamer-Basha, Dasu, Bunji and the list goes on... Wapda is the main culprit here. They haven't got the guts and capability to tell these politicians how important these dams are for Pakistan. At present, we have complete engineering designs of all the above named dams but on ground, there is absolutely nothing. Its such a shame that we are entangled in our political motos while the world is entirely focusing on its energy needs.
good effort to raise awareness. however i am afraid that our cold blooded politicians wont understand this. there are many solutions to the problem, one could be to that Punjab, Sindh and K-P all share the royalties from the project.
Forget national interests and power shortage, let me first focus on whether the LHC decision was judicial activisim or not, once I've spewed several hundered articles on the subject and political parties have drowned out any voice of reason, then I might read your article and ponder for a few seconds, and then move on. That is how we operate. Simple.
It is baffling to me why we are having this conversation. We dont even have the will or money to build dams we have agreed upon, let alone spend time arguing about Kalabagh. There is a list of dams that are ready to be built because all the engineering designs are finalized and the land acquisition has already started. WHY ARE WE NOT DOING THINGS WE CAN RATHER THAN POSSIBILITY OF DOING THINGS WE CANT EVEN AGREE UPON!
Pakistan owe water to its future generations and for that reason alone Pakistan needs Kalabagh dam. It is very unfortunate that those who have no plans to harness hundreds of thousands of gallon of water that goes into sea every day, and those who have ruined Pakistan’s national resources like Railways are champions of cause – not to build the dam. Fact is that their provinces will be the biggest beneficiary of the dam but they are the one opposing it the most. Rather than sitting together and resolving any differences they may have they are trying to pit provinces against each other for their personal gains. They are nothing but enemy of the state.
After experiencing so much load shedding people of Pakistan has not gotten it yet and still believe these political pundits who don’t have rudimentary understanding of what Kalabagh dam will do for millions of people across Pakistan. It is a shame that while world is moving forward these political pundits have been taking Pakistan backward.
Due to water shortage across Pakistan, which will start happening within next ten years it will be lot worse for those who will be living by then. Alas, it will be too late by then to learn from past mistakes and most of these political pundits would have moved to better pastures in other countries.